Tag: inide pop

New Audio: Ian Asher’s Remix of JAIN’s Infectious, Smash Hit “Makeeba”

French-born with international pop sensation JAIN is a true international citizen: She has spent significant portions of her live in the United Arab Emirates and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Her full-length debut 2016’s Zanaka quickly put her on the global pop map: The album sold over one-million copies worldwide, with singles “Come” and “Makeba” climbing the charts. Adding to a growing profile, the accompanying video for “Makeba” led to the French-born pop earning artist her first Grammy Award nomination for Best Music Video.

JAIN’s sophomore album, 2018’s Souldier reached #1 on the French charts, with the album achieving double platinum status, while album single “Alright” was certified diamond. That same year, Rolling Stone named the French-born pop artist, “An Artist You Need To Know.”

The French pop star has played over 300 shows in 15 countries across the European Union, North America, South America and Asia, as well as the rounds of the global festival circuit with sets at Coachella and Lollapalooza. She has also performed on The Late Show with Stephen ColbertLater . . . with Jools Holland, the 2018 Ryder Cup and the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup.

Her highly-anticipated third album The Fool was released earlier this year through Columbia/Sony Music France. The album serves as a new chapter for the French-born pop sensation. Thematically, the album chronicles the stages one goes through whenever they make a fresh start — fear, excitement, innocent, self-doubt/doubt, letting go, epiphany and more. And while her perviously released work saw her effortlessly meshing a myriad collection of genres, styles and instrumentation including Arabic percussion, African rhythms, electro pop, reggae, soul and hip-hop, The Fool is a decided change in sonic direction with the material drawing from Kate Bush and Stevie Nicks

Recently, the French pop sensation’s hit “Makeba” has gone viral globally. I’ve seen at least three different Instagram reels today that have mentioned the song. And understandably, artists and producers from across the globe have shared their own takes on the smash hit single, including American producer Ian Asher. Asher’s remix retains JAIN’s coquettish delivery and the song’s incredibly catchy hook but while stepping up the tempo quite a bit — creating a subtle yet breezy house meets footwork take.

The Ian Asher remix serves a reminder of why the song has become so wildly popular a few years after its release — it has a hook that you can’t get out of your brain, no matter what you do.

Born and reared in the Springfield, IL area and currently splitting her time between San Francisco, CA and Big Sur, CA singer/songwriter. guitarist and producer Jenny Gillespie can trace her musical career to her childhood — during drives to and from town, a young Gillespie spent quite a bit of time harmonizing in the backseat with her sister, who is a gifted pianist. When Gillespie was 13, she picked up her mother’s Martin guitar and began putting the poems she had started writing to music. A local record clerk changed the young singer/songwriter’s life by giving her albums from three of the 90s’ most renowned singer/songwriters — Tori Amos, Sarah McLachlan and Shawn Colvin.

After stints living in Virginia, Paris and Texas, Gillespie relocated to Chicago, where she self-produced and then released the folk and alt-country influenced sophomore effort Light Year to a fair amount of critical praise across the blogosphere. As a result of Light Year‘s exposure, Gillespie met Darwin Smith, an Austin, TX-based multi-instrumentalist, with whom she wrote her third full-length effort, Kindred, a sparse, experimental, electronica-based effort recorded in an old house in Wilmette, IL with contributions from Steve Moore, who has worked with Tift Merritt and Laura Veirs and Dony Wynn, who has worked with Robert Plant.

Inspired by a volunteer trip to Kenya that led her to an African fingerpicking class at the Old Town School of Folk Music and studying for an MFA in Poetry at North Carolina’s Warren Wilson College, Gillespie found her sound and songwriting approach expanding and becoming more refined. And by the fall of 2011, she traveled to NYC to record the EP Belita with Shazard Ismaily, a multi-instrumentalist who has worked with Lou Reed, Bonnie Prince Billy, and St. Vincent. Interestingly, that effort possesses elements of pop, folk music, African and Asian rhythms and tones.

Featuring contributions from Emmett Kelly (Bonnie Prince Billy) on guitar and Joe Adamik (Califone, Iron and Wine) on drums, her last full-length effort Chamma was released to critical praise, including landing on Billboard Magazines Top 25 Albums of 2014 List. Naturally, that has seen Gillespie’s profile grow nationally — and continuing on that buzz, the singer/songwriter is set to release Chamma‘s follow-up, Cure for Dreaming early next year through Narooma Records. Recorded over the past couple of months and featuring contributions from Paul Bryan (Aimee Mann), drummer Jay Bellerose (Robert Plant and Allison KraussRaising Sand), guitarist Chris Bruce (Meshell Ndgeocello), guitarist Gerry Leonard (David Bowie), and pedal steel player Greg Leisz (Lucinda Williams, Bon Iver), the album  reportedly possesses elements of folk, progressive jazz, and 60s and 70s AM pop.

“No Stone” Cure for Dreaming‘s first single pairs Gillespie’s husky and unhurried vocals with a spacious yet warm and subtly jazz-like arrangement of keys, guitar, bass, gently buzzing electronics and hushed drumming in a song that feels as intimate as a lover whispering sweet nothings in your ear. And at its core, is conversational lyricism that possesses a novelist’s attention to detail, as you can picture the woman who hides her face by the ocean, the cherry blossom trees in bloom, someone peering through a keyhole to see a depressed woman struggling to just starting her day — and a novelist’s attention to psychological detail. The song’s narrator feels like a fully-fleshed out person, desperately struggling to push on. Interestingly, each time I’ve played the song I’ve been reminded of how Gillespie sounds so much like Joni Mitchell — it’s incredibly uncanny.

Comprised of childhood friends, Scott Johnson (vocals and guitar), Giuseppe De Luca (vocals and guitar), Adam Taylor (bass), Sean Goodchild (guitar) and Graham Robson (drums), the Leeds, UK-based quintet of Goodbye Chanel came about as several members […]